2008 Annual Meeting
(712e) Breakage of Needle-Shaped Particle Assemblies : Estimation of Breakage Functions from Discrete Element Simulations
Authors
In this contribution we present a new methodology for determining the breakage functions (breakage kernel and daughter distribution function) for a population balance model from Discrete Element (DEM) simulations of needle-shaped particle breakage. The main advantage of this methodology is that individual particles can be traced within a particle assembly during the simulation, and so the frequency of breakage events as well as the size distribution of daughter particles can be evaluated explicitly in a statistically robust way. The methodology consists of two parts: (i) the DEM simulation of needle-shaped particle breakage as described in [1], whereby the influence of parameters such as the aspect ratio, initial length distribution, and the intrinsic mechanical properties of particles and their distribution can be systematically investigated; (ii) post-processing of the DEM simulation outputs (i.e., broken and un-broken particles within a population as function of time and/or compression ratio) and the explicit evaluation of the breakage functions. Convoluted PSD data can be extracted both from DEM simulations and from subsequent population balance models of breakage, and used as an additional verification of the consistency of the two models and their comparison with experimental data.
References:
1. Grof Z., Kohout M., těpánek F., Multi-scale simulation of needle-shaped particle breakage under uni-axial compaction, Chem. Eng. Sci. 62, 1418-1429 (2007)